Miscellaneous Rheumatic Diseases [73–83]

Background: Patients with acute, hot, swollen joints commonly present to general practitioners, emergency departments and/or acute admitting teams rather than directly to rheumatology. It is imperative to consider septic arthritis in the differential diagnosis of these patients. The British Society...

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Veröffentlicht in:Rheumatology (Oxford, England) England), 2010-04, Vol.49 (suppl-1), p.i61-i64
Hauptverfasser: Mannan, Emma, Reddy, Venkat, Pearce, Christopher, Peters, James, Giles, Ian, Shipley, Mike, Paul, Anupam, Rigby, Shirley, Abdellatif mohammed, Reem H., Elmakhzangy, Hesham I., Esmat, Gamal, Gamal, Amira, Mekky, Fatma, Ibrahim, Nabil M., Elhamid, Mohammed A., Lallemant, Camille, Greenwood, Matthew, Muir, Jane, Keller, Majella, Tibble, Jerry, Whale, Richard, Haq, Inam, Cohen, Helen, Harris, Nigel, McCabe, Candy, Cocker, Michael, Francis, Roger, Narici, Marco, Birrell, Fraser, Van Velsen, G., Lachmann, H. J., Kone-Paut, I., Kuemmerle-Deschner, J. B., Leslie, K., Hachulla, E., Quartier, P., Ferreira, A., Patel, N., Lheritier, K., Preiss, R., Hawkins, P., Mehta, Puja, Laffan, Mike A., Haskard, Dorian O., Haroon, Muhammad, Daly, Mary, Eltahir, Ahmed, Harney, Sinead
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Patients with acute, hot, swollen joints commonly present to general practitioners, emergency departments and/or acute admitting teams rather than directly to rheumatology. It is imperative to consider septic arthritis in the differential diagnosis of these patients. The British Society of Rheumatology (BSR) has produced guidelines for the management of this condition, which include recommendations for early specialist referral and joint aspiration of all patients with suspected septic arthritis. We examined whether the initial management of patients with acute hot swollen joint(s) at University College London Hospital (UCLH) follows BSR guidelines. Methods: For the period Feb to Nov 2009, appropriate patients were identified by searching the UCLH database using the diagnostic terms, “pyogenic arthritis”, “septic arthritis” and “gout”; and from all joint aspirate requests sent to microbiology. Medical notes were obtained and any patients who had elective arthroscopies or chronic (> 6 weeks) symptoms were excluded. Data were collected on the time taken from the onset of symptoms to specialist (orthopaedic/rheumatology) referral and joint aspiration, collection of blood cultures and antibiotic treatment with or without microbiology advice. Results: Twenty patients were identified with hot swollen (18 monoarticular, 3 prosthetic) joint(s) of
ISSN:1462-0324
1462-0332
DOI:10.1093/rheumatology/keq718